This is a guest post by Brad Flaugher, author, consultant and founder of the Philadelphia Open Innovation Tournament, for which Technical.ly is a proud media partner.

It’s no secret to anyone in the startup ecosystem that Philly is currently a great place to be. With a global ranking of No. 13 on Startup Genome’s 2025 report and nearly $3.3 billion in venture funding raised last year, the city has established itself as a serious player in the innovation landscape. 

In this ecosystem, however, having a great idea isn’t enough. You need to execute it efficiently. 

“Should we hire more people to tackle complex challenges, or can we leverage AI to achieve better results faster?”

That’s where “AI lift” comes in. The term refers to the ability to use AI to amplify your capabilities and get more done with less. Yet not everyone is taking advantage.

As organizations grapple with today’s fundamental workplace question — “Should we hire more people to tackle complex challenges, or can we leverage AI to achieve better results faster?” — too many default to the expensive option, building teams to handle tasks that AI could accomplish in minutes.

The Philadelphia Open Innovation Tournament, held Oct. 25-26, is designed to identify the people who understand this shift and can navigate it effectively.

Built on proven Wharton research

The Philadelphia Open Innovation Tournament applies the “Innovation Tournament” framework developed by Wharton professors Karl Ulrich and Christian Terwiesch.

Having taken their course through Wharton Executive Education, I’ve seen how their structured approach systematically identifies breakthrough opportunities. With their blessing, we’ve adapted their methodology to include a crucial modern element: measuring how well participants can leverage AI.

Ulrich and Terwiesch’s research shows that innovation tournaments work across industries. They’ve run them for Fortune 500 companies in banking, healthcare, defense and professional sports. The methodology isn’t just for startups; it’s for anyone facing complex challenges, whether you’re optimizing processes, developing products or solving operational problems.

What makes this approach so effective is the process-driven nature. As Terwiesch explains, most organizations “fail to do much of anything when it comes to innovation” because they treat it as “illusive and left to chance.” 

Innovation tournaments change that by creating a systematic way to surface, develop and implement valuable opportunities from hundreds or even thousands of initial ideas.

This year’s new challenge

Following last year’s successful event, we’ve redesigned the first round to include an AI assessment. 

Participants get three hours to create a real work product using AI tools: websites, pitch decks, videos, or custom applications. Teams split up for individual submissions, allowing us to identify the strongest AI operators who can then form super-teams for later rounds.

This format mirrors what’s happening in the real world. When a startup needs a landing page, should they hire a web developer for $5,000 and wait two weeks, or can someone on the team create something compelling in an afternoon using AI tools? When a corporation needs market research, should they contract an expensive consulting firm, or can their internal team generate insights using AI-powered analysis?

The three-hour time constraint isn’t arbitrary. It reflects the speed advantage that AI provides. We want to see who can move from concept to execution quickly, who understands the right prompts and workflows, and who can iterate rapidly to improve their output.

This isn’t about replacing traditional evaluation criteria like compelling ideas, sales ability or team-building skills. It’s about adding a new dimension that reflects today’s reality: the most successful innovators are those who can effectively combine human creativity with AI capabilities.

$125,000+ in prizes 

The tournament offers substantial prizes: up to $100,000 in AWS credits, $25,000 in seed funding from NextFab Ventures for robotics entries and direct connections to Philadelphia’s top VCs and angels. 

But the real value lies in the skills participants develop and demonstrate.

This tournament demonstrates that Philadelphia’s professionals are ready for the AI transformation happening across industries. Whether you’re a corporate executive, startup founder, or consultant, developing AI proficiency is becoming as fundamental as learning to use spreadsheets was twenty years ago.

The event takes place over two days, with participants competing for seven finalist spots. Day one is open to everyone; day two features the private finale for top performers. At just $20 for entry (plus $20 for the happy hour), it’s an accessible way to test your skills against peers and learn from the experience. Visit innovationphilly.com to register.

Join us Oct. 25-26 at the Racquet Club of Philadelphia. Let’s show that Philadelphia isn’t just keeping up with the future. We’re building it.

Philly Open Innovation Tournament

  • When: Saturday-Sunday, Oct. 25-26
  • Where: Racquet Club of Philadelphia
  • Address: 215 S. 16th St., Philadelphia, PA 19102
  • Cost: $20-$40
  • Register: innovationphilly.com